If you were thinking about picking up an IT related book in order to improve yourself as a programmer, what are the top three topics you would try to pick?
I don't think you need graph theory in specific, unless actually working with it. You should have the skills to grok the basics of graph theory if needed.
I wouldn't dismiss the idea that there may be some crossover where knowing some technique from graph theory would make some obscure aspect of your application more efficient. However, I've generally (coming from an engineering background and now in data science) seen it go horribly in the opposite direction; people throwing obscure and horribly-complex approaches to a problem and just destroying the setup
Like, there are many different formulations to various problem, graphs being just one of them. But you should be able to translate a graph formulation to whatever you are familiar with.
Though from my experience, anything that is aimed at *-theory tends to invite style over substance.
Just been though some ML paper on graphs that could be basically summed up as "express page rank as an adjacency matrix".
The take-away is that you're not a "bad" programmer if you don't understand what others will say is essential to know. If the abstract of that article is to be believed, there's a lot of touting about technical things that people can know that doesn't translate to measurable outcomes. I really need to have an actual read because the abstract and title is just confirming my biases and that's not exactly scientific
This being an academic person, I knew not to jump into conclusions and hold onto my suspicions. I have been doing programming for about 6 years and I have not once had to solve graph problems.
Well, I gave up even trying to understand academic papers on the Travelling Salesman Problem
I don't care whether the new approach is more likely to solve the problem. None of them have any application in the real world. The problems are totally unrealistic, don't contain all of the constraints of a real problem, and take minutes to solve. I also spent long enough in the academic sphere to know, at least from engineering, how/why these papers get published.
A really open question; is Java fundamentally different in the design patterns that it enforces from C++? I understand that they're radically different languages, but are the design patterns completely alien between the two?
I mean, languages don't exactly enforce any design patterns. But I'm sure that the design patterns that are commonly used in those two languages have very little overlap
well, maybe "very little" is not quite true, considering what kind of stuff is considered a "design pattern" nowadays
I've had 2 days on kotlin and it's actually really helping me understand interfaces and seeing what python actually does for us. I'm kinda trying to build a roadmap of languages. But yeah, it's not a great question for the python room... but it's a neutral base at the same time
My predicament is that Python doesn't push me enough to think about how I design programs. With no outside influence, the best I can do is just review existing libraries, and I can't get the mindset, so I think it's more useful to review other languages
@wim Oh, the perfect guy. Do you think it's fine to use xmlrpc as long as the two security modules are set up? Or is still a security risk?
I'm looking for an easy way to write server/client apps that I can recommend to newbies instead of sockets. So far this is the most promising candidate, unfortunately
@roganjosh Sometimes I think that too, but other times I can't even imagine how I'd translate my code into other languages. Like, imagine not having *args, **kwargs. I'd be screwed.
hmm anyone got an idea how to wait for a docker to "finish" without burning the cpu?
while status == '\'running\'\n':
status = subprocess.check_output(['sudo', 'docker', 'inspect',
docker_identification,
'--format=\'{{.State.Status}}\''], universal_newlines=True)
that's currently what I have, but it's obviously bad